Doc encourages mustache growth to fight cancer
By Betty Jespersen, Special to the Sun Journal
Published Aug 11, 2010 12:10 pm

Dr. Lou Jacobs, a Farmington native and Portland-based chiropractor, is encouraging men to grow mustaches to raise money for cancer research.

Growing a mustache to raise awareness of cancer is an odd thing to do, but Dr. Lou Jacobs is hoping the idea is quirky enough to catch on.

The Farmington-born chiropractor and acupuncturist with a busy practice in Portland sports a waxed, handlebar mustache that he started growing when his mother, Patty, was diagnosed with inflammatory breast cancer last year.

A runner and locally known volunteer in Farmington, she died in May of complications from the aggressive disease. Now his father, Bert, a psychology professor at the University of Maine at Farmington, has contracted leukemia and is scheduled to have a bone-marrow transplant later this month.

“At first, I grew it as a joke and Mom thought it was funny,” Lou Jacobs said Monday. “She kidded around and said she would have preferred I had been a clown rather than a chiropractor.”

He had contemplated organizing the mustache-growing fundraiser when his mother was still alive, but it wasn’t the right time. Now, with his father ill, Lou Jacobs sees it as a way to help others and support two good organizations that focus on cancer patients and their families.

“Dr. Lou,” as he is known to his patients, has set a goal of raising $5,000 between Aug. 25 — the day of his father’s bone-marrow transplant surgery — and Jan. 1, 2011. Donations will be split between The Cancer Community Center of South Portland, where Jacobs has been a volunteer and is on the Board of Directors, and the Inflammatory Breast Cancer Foundation, which provided the Jacobs family with support.

For the mustache project, Jacobs has partnered with Dr. Roger Inhorn, medical director of oncology and hematology at Mercy Hospital in Portland. Along with fundraising, Inhorn and Jacobs plan to secure a monthly spot for the rest of the year on a local news channel to discuss the latest topics related to cancer detection, prevention and treatment.

To follow Jacobs’ “My ‘Stache Fights Cancer” campaign, go to his blog at http://mystachefightscancer.blogspot.com. A website, www.mystachefightscancer.com, is under construction and will be completed this week. He also is tracking the project on his Facebook site.

Men who want to grow their own versions of face fuzz can create their own pages on the new site, download photos of their progress and make direct pitches for donations.

As an added incentive, if $5,000 is raised, Jacobs is offering to shave off his own handlebars. If $10,000 is pledged, he will up the ante and sacrifice his prized goatee.

“But I really don’t want to do that,” he said.

Jacobs is asking the donors to decide by casting ballots when they make their pledges, either on their checks or on the website. He said his wife, Ana, would like to see the waxed mustache gone, but his patients are split on the facial-hair artistry.

“My thinking behind all this is that people shouldn’t always have to run a race, ride a bike or do a walk to raise money for a good cause,” Jacobs said. “I understand those are all healthy things, but not everyone can or wants to do it.”

“I thought, ‘Why not give people a way to get involved that was fun and kind of silly?’” he said.

On Tuesday, Jacobs learned he had landed a national sponsor, Oregon Wild Hair Moustache Wax based in Oregon.

“This is a proud day in the world of fundraising with mustaches,” Jacobs wrote on his blog.

The company is owned by Susan and Mark Coyl, whose website is www.oregonwildhair.com.

“We feel his cause is noble and important. We lost a sister-in-law two years ago to cancer that she fought for 10 years and we miss her very much,” they wrote in an e-mail on Tuesday.

Their product is made in small, handmade batches of beeswax, petroleum jelly, lanolin and natural musk oil and “does not spoil the taste of tea or coffee,” according to the website.

Jacobs attended the University of Maine at Farmington and Beijing Polytechnic University in Beijing, China. He received his Doctor of Chiropractic degree from Cleveland Chiropractic College in Kansas City, Mo. He returned to Maine in 2003 and opened Jacobs Chiropractic Acupuncture Center that same year.

Donations can be sent to The Cancer Community Center, 778 Main St., South Portland, ME, 04106. For information, e-mail Jacobs at drj@drloujacobs.com or search for Dr. Lou Jacobs on Facebook.